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Mozzy Explains Why His New Album ‘Occupational Hazard’ Is His Favorite Project To Date

(AllHipHop News) Just four months after dropping Beyond Bulletproof, Mozzy delivers another full-length body of work. Occupational Hazard arrived on September 22 with guest features by Wale, Quando Rondo, YFN Lucci, Blxst, Trae Tha Truth, Tsu Surf, and more.

“This is my favorite project to date out of all my EPs, mixtapes, albums. I had to get back to the old me, the Hellgang Mozzy, and bring people that heat that talks directly to the streets,” says Mozzy. “My last album Beyond Bulletproof was something catered to the masses, but Occupational Hazard is for those who live a certain lifestyle.”

‘Occupational Hazard’ Cover Art

The California-based rapper continues, “With Occupational Hazard I want to let people know it’s not always velvet or rainbows at the end of the tunnel. When you choose to maneuver and make your money a certain way, there can be consequences that come with that, but own it, embrace it, don’t dwell on it. Know what you signed up for and take the ups and downs with pride.”

Apparently, Mozzy completed the 14-track Occupational Hazard in one month. The Oak Park representative released his latest LP via his own Mozzy Records and Empire. Beyond Bulletproof peaked at #43 on the Billboard 200 which became the emcee born Timothy Cornell Patterson’s highest-charting project of his career.

Snoop Dogg Launches #VoteWithSnoop Online Voter Registration Drive

(AllHipHop News) There are just 42 days until Election Day 2020. November 3 is the final date to vote in the American general election, but citizens in some states have already begun casting ballots for their preferred candidates through early in-person voting and mail-in voting.

Entertainment icon Calvin “Snoop Dogg” Broadus Jr. is helping to spread awareness about taking part in the American political process. Snoop Dogg teamed up with the nonpartisan, nonprofit voting advocacy groups Rock The Vote and 1 VoteCloser as well as the social justice initiative OneOpp to launch an online voter registration drive.

“This is gonna be the first election I am voting in. How the system is set up, I honestly didn’t know that I was allowed to vote based on my past history. My record has been expunged so I’m gonna be out there this election. I have to get involved,” says Snoop Dogg. “As I’m looking around at what is happening in the world right now, I know that we need to make an immediate change and we can’t sit back idle, which is why, along with OneOpp, I’ve partnered with Rock The Vote and 1VoteCloser. I’m gonna use my voice and influence to let people know that the only option is to get out and vote.”

#VoteWithSnoop will run now through the election on November 3. OBEY Clothing founder Shepard Fairey (the artist behind the iconic Barack Obama “Hope” poster) created a series of posters featuring Snoop Dogg that will be displayed in cities around the country.

“30 years ago when we started Rock the Vote, no one spoke of the youth vote, except to say that young people did not vote. What began as a response to the censorship of hip hop artists grew into a radical mobilization of young people as a political force,” states Rock The Vote founder Jeff Ayeroff. “We are thrilled to have Snoop Dogg – himself a subject of artistic censorship early in his career – join the list of iconic artists with whom we’ve worked to turn engagement into action and get the youth to the polls. Snoop is an artist whose work has pushed boundaries; an entrepreneur whose imagination knows no limits; and a social activist who, along with OneOpp, is focused on getting out the vote. ”

1VoteCloser founder Frances Berman adds, “1VoteCloser is honored to partner with Snoop Dogg, a founding father of Hip Hop, to further our mission of educating voters about the issues and encouraging every eligible voter to VOTE. Thank you, Snoop and OneOpp, for shining a spotlight on VOTING RIGHTS.”

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Starz Renews 50 Cent’s ‘Power Book II: Ghost’ Series For A Second Season

(AllHipHop News) Fans of the Power Universe received some good news this week. Power Book II: Ghost from End of Episode’s Courtney A. Kemp (executive producer, creator, showrunner) and G-Unit Film and Television’s Curtis “50 Cent” Jackson (executive producer) will be back for a second season on Starz.

Book II was renewed for more installments after only airing three episodes of season one. According to Starz, the spinoff became the most-watched new series in the network’s history in its debut week with around 7.5 million total viewers. Subscriber acquisition for the Starz app reportedly rose 42% in the first week after the show’s premiere.

“The success of Ghost right out of the gate is a tribute to the quality of Courtney’s storytelling, the strength of the Power franchise, and the loyalty of our incredible fans,” said Christina Davis, Starz’s President of Programming.

Davis continued, “What Courtney, Curtis, and their team have accomplished in creating the Power Universe is nothing short of extraordinary. It is a privilege to be able to continue the journey of Power with the audience and we look forward to delving deeper into this world in exciting new ways for many seasons to come.”

The cast of Power Book II: Ghost includes Michael Rainey Jr., Naturi Naughton, Mary J. Blige, Clifford “Method Man” Smith, Shane Johnson, Gianni Paolo, Paige Hurd, and Woody McClain. The premiere season of Book II will air in two parts. The mid-season finale is scheduled for October 4 with the five remaining episodes set to return later this year.

“I am incredibly humbled by and grateful for the response from our Power fans – the best fans in the world, period. To have our fans return – and bring new viewers to the first spinoff in the Power Universe – is a dream come true. Back in 2012, 50, Mark, and I were warned that a premium series with leads of color would never work for a global audience. But we’ve proven everyone wrong – and thanks to Starzplay, we have fans in the UK, France, Mexico, Brazil and beyond, all plugging into the Power Universe,” said Courtney A. Kemp. “In the second season, Tariq’s journey with the Tejada family will get even more complicated – and more dangerous – as he begins to understand the man he’s going to become.”

Curtis “50 Cent” Jackson added, “When I had the idea to create the Power Universe I knew there were going to be many levels to its success, I am glad the fans agree. I am looking forward to releasing Power Book III: Raising Kanan and Power Book IV: Force soon.”

Post Malone, Lil Nas X & Khalid Lead 2020 Billboard Music Award Nominations

(AllHipHop News) The 2020 Billboard Music Awards were originally scheduled for April 29, but the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic caused the ceremony to be postponed. October 14 was announced as the new date for the BBMAs.

Post Malone will go into the night with the most nominations. The Hollywood’s Bleeding album creator picked up 16 nods, including Top Artist, Top Male Artist, Top Hot 100 Artist, Top Streaming Songs Artist, Top Song Sales Artist, Top Radio Songs Artist, Top Rap Artist, Top Rap Male Artist, and Top Rap Album.

“Old Town Road” performer Lil Nas X has the second-most BBMAs nominations this year with 13. Pop singer Billie Eilish and R&B singer Khalid tied with 12 nominations each. Singer-songwriter Lizzo netted 11 nominations. Hip Hop artist Kanye West earned 9 nominations in the Christian/Gospel categories for his Jesus Is King album.

DaBaby, Juice WRLD, Lil Nas X, Post Malone, and Roddy Ricch are up for Top Rap Artist. DaBaby, Lil Nas X, and Post Malone were also nominated for Top Rap Male Artist. DaBaby’s Kirk, Juice WRLD’s Death Race For Love, Post Malone’s Hollywood’s Bleeding, Roddy Ricch’s Please Excuse Me for Being Antisocial, and Young Thug’s So Much Fun were nominated for Top Rap Album.

In addition, the Top Rap Female Artist trophy will go to Cardi B, City Girls, or Megan Thee Stallion. The Top Rap Tour section features Drake, Post Malone, and Travis Scott. Top New Artist will be presented to DaBaby, Billie Eilish, Lil Nas X, Lizzo, or Roddy Ricch.

Check out some of the 2020 Billboard Music Award nominations below. To see the full list of nominees visit billboard.com. The 2020 Billboard Music Awards, hosted by Kelly Clarkson, will broadcast live from The Dolby Theatre in Los Angeles on October 14 at 8 pm ET on NBC.

Top Artist:
Billie Eilish
Jonas Brothers
Khalid
Post Malone
Taylor Swift

Top New Artist:
DaBaby
Billie Eilish
Lil Nas X
Lizzo
Roddy Ricch

Billboard Chart Achievement Award (Fan Voted):
Mariah Carey
Luke Combs
Lil Nas X
Harry Styles
Taylor Swift

Top Male Artist:
DaBaby
Khalid
Lil Nas X
Post Malone
Ed Sheeran

Top Female Artist:
Billie Eilish
Ariana Grande
Halsey
Lizzo
Taylor Swift

Top Billboard 200 Artist:
Drake
Billie Eilish
Khalid
Post Malone
Taylor Swift

Top Hot 100 Artist:
DaBaby
Billie Eilish
Khalid
Lil Nas X
Post Malone

Top Rap Artist:
DaBaby
Juice WRLD
Lil Nas X
Post Malone
Roddy Ricch

Top Rap Male Artist:
DaBaby
Lil Nas X
Post Malone

Top Rap Female Artist:
Cardi B
City Girls
Megan Thee Stallion 

Top Rap Tour:
Drake
Post Malone
Travis Scott

Top Rap Album:
DaBaby – Kirk
Juice WRLD – Death Race For Love
Post Malone – Hollywood’s Bleeding
Roddy Ricch – Please Excuse Me for Being Antisocial
Young Thug  – So Much Fun

Top R&B Artist:
Chris Brown
Khalid
Lizzo
Summer Walker
The Weeknd

Top R&B Male Artist:
Chris Brown
Khalid
The Weeknd 

Top R&B Female Artist:
Beyoncé
Lizzo
Summer Walker

Top R&B Tour:
B2K
Janet Jackson
Khalid 

Top R&B Album:
Beyoncé – Homecoming: The Live Album
Justin Bieber – Changes
Chris Brown – Indigo
Khalid – Free Spirit
Summer Walker – Over It

Megan Thee Stallion Covers ‘Time’ Magazine’s 100 Most Influential People Issue

(AllHipHop News) 2020 was a breakout year for Megan Thee Stallion as a mainstream music artist. The Houston-bred rapper scored two #1 singles on Billboard‘s Hot 100 chart this year (“WAP” with Cardi B and “Savage” with Beyoncé). Plus, she won several industry awards.

Megan’s meteoric rise to fame was further solidified when the Suga EP creator was selected for the cover of Time magazine’s 100 Most Influential People of 2020 list. Empire actress Taraji P. Henson penned the article about the 25-year-old performer.

“It’s invigorating to see her become a platinum-selling artist with the viral hit ‘Hot Girl Summer’ and multiple No. 1 songs in the past year, ‘Savage’ and ‘WAP.’ But you would be a fool to think that’s all there is to her,” wrote Henson. “She’s deep. She’s enrolled in college. She’s an entertainer. She’s a free spirit; I see that in her. The industry might try to pigeonhole her in this rap game, but she’s got a plan that’s much bigger. And we got her. I just want her to keep winning.”

https://www.instagram.com/p/CFdjowAF_ZS/

Megan Thee Stallion celebrated appearing on the front of the 97-year-old news publication. She posted on Instagram, “STILL I RISE🖤 YOUNG BLACK WOMAN FROM HOUSTON TEXAS ON THE COVER OF TIME MAGAZINE AS ONE OF THE MOST INFLUENTIAL PEOPLE IN THE WORLD 🌎.”

Other celebrities chosen as one of Time‘s 100 Most Influential People of 2020 include The Weeknd, Michael B. Jordan, Selena Gomez, Jennifer Hudson, Dapper Dan, Giannis Antetokounmpo, Dwyane Wade, Gabrielle Union, Tyler Perry, Billy Porter, Naomi Osaka, Joe Biden, Nancy Pelosi, Kamala Harris, and Donald Trump.

“This year’s list looks far different than any of us could have predicted just six months ago. The TIME 100 has always been a mirror of the world and those who shape it. While you will certainly find people who wield traditional power on this year’s list—heads of state, CEOs, major entertainers­—it also includes many extraordinary, lesser-known individuals who seized the moment to save lives, build a movement, lift the spirit, repair the world…. Their work challenges each of us to wield our own influence toward a world that is healthier, more resilient, more sustainable, and just,” says Time CEO and editor in chief Edward Felsenthal.

Felsenthal continues, “As a rule, the TIME 100 focuses on the living, but looming large over this year’s list is the impact of individuals such as Ahmaud Arbery, George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, and Tony McDade, whose killings galvanized a reckoning around police brutality and systemic racism; Aimee Stephens, whose case led to a historic Supreme Court decision protecting the rights of LGBTQ Americans; and Li Wenliang, the Wuhan physician who tried in vain to warn Chinese officials about the corona­virus and later died of it. The issue also includes a memorial to Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, including the tribute that fellow Justice Antonin Scalia wrote when she was on the TIME 100 in 2015.”

EXCLUSIVE: Slug & Murs Discuss Reuniting On ‘Felt 4’ & Reminisce On The Early Days

Slug and Murs have reunited and released their first new album from Felt in over a decade. Surprise releasing it to their very loyal fanbases, the dynamic duo blesses hip-hop with the release of Felt 4 U. Boasting 12 records, the project is entirely produced by Ant of Atmosphere, which is only right given the trio’s history and success.

With both artists equipped with their out-of-this-world, comedic personalities, the synergy on the records are seemingly flawless. Their camaraderie has been a driving force in their creativity and lyrics, serving as a role model for all aspiring MCs who hope to achieve the stature they have peaked in their lifetime.

Felt 4 U speaks volumes to the current times, touching on everything from social justice to politics to overall culture. Beyond the music, both are fathers and extremely family-oriented, with Slug even joining the Zoom interview from his children’s schoolroom in Minnesota. Murs came in hot with the “Go!” Netflix show background, a subtle reminder of his love for comics and movies.

AllHipHop: New album Felt 4 U! How are you guys feeling now that it’s out?

Murs: Relief, wo we don’t get that question “when’s the next Felt?”

Slug: I’m nervous, I’m scared to hear what people think of it. I’ve been avoiding the internet, I don’t want to know. I hope they like it.

AllHipHop: I can never tell when you’re serious.

Murs: [laughs] I never know when he’s serious, that’s why it took so long to record Felt 4 U because I didn’t know when he’s serious or not. He’s like “let’s do this record, just kidding!”

AllHipHop: How has the fan reception been?

Slug: They think it’s glorious. They think it’s genius. The s##t’s genius.

Murs: Rap genius, but not really anymore. I think the fans are happy.

Slug: Murs, what’s your favorite song on there?

Murs: “Trees” or “Through The Night.” They’re fun to do. I got to razzle dazzle Slug with my rapping skills on “Through The Night,” then “Trees” was fun to write together. Right on top of each other, sharing bars.

Slug: [Mine are] “Through The Night,” “Trees,” “Underwater,” “Hologram,” “Crimson Skies,” all that s##t.

AllHipHop: Where are you right now?

Slug: I’m at school in Minnesota. This is the distance learning center, we call it the school house. It used to be a studio, now it’s school. Every day, we bring them over here to get them away from the distractions.

Murs: That’s the workhouse where we recorded Felt 4. It’s usually a huge man cave, now he transformed it into a virtual school. f##k you COVID, you killed the studio. COVID killed the man cave.

Slug: Nah, I like coming over here with them. It’s a different energy. When they’re busy working on stuff, I can do a little bit of work myself. It’s a good energy, the snacks are even healthier now that they’re here.

Murs: Do they play the video game when they get a break?

Slug: Yeah, we have f##k Off time. When it’s f##k Off time, they get to f##k off and play the video games.

AllHipHop: You don’t say f##k off do you?

Murs: I curse at my children regularly.

Slug: [laughs] Would it be bad if I said f##k off in front of my kids? You think they don’t hear my music?

AllHipHop: How old are they now?

Slug: The two that come over here are 10 and 6.

Murs: Mine are 1, 2, and 7.

AllHipHop: Omg, you have a 1-year-old?

Murs: Yeah, he’s a f##ker. A fat f##ker though, I like him. I like him better than I liked his brothers at his age. I said I love you, he’ll come kiss me. He’s cute. He’s cuter than the rest of them at this point. Cute babies can get ugly later but right now, he’s winning the cute race.

AllHipHop: I’m sending this to your other kids.

Murs: They think he’s really cute too. He’s chubby. We’re all vegan skinny in this house, he’s got some meat on his bones. He’s vegan thick, so he’s cute.

Slug: He’s vegan Pikachu. When you say vegan thick it makes me think of Pikachu.

AllHipHop: How long have you been vegan Murs?

Murs: I’ve been vegan off and on since ‘04. I’ve been vegetarian since ‘93.

AllHipHop: Has that helped your clarity when you’re making music?

Murs: No not at all, I just don’t want to die early.

Slug: When we made the first Felt, you weren’t vegetarian bro. I’d never met nobody who’d get excited about a new burger at a fast food joint, you’re the first person. You took me to Carl’s Jr. to get the $6 burger.

Murs: I haven’t had beef since I was 15, it had to be a chicken sandwich.

Slug: They only charged $4, I remember this specifically. You were mad they charged $4 for something called the $6 burger. I’m telling you, it’s burned in my memory. [laughs]

Slug, Murs and Ant

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Photo credit: Dan Monick

AllHipHop: What was your friendship like when you guys made the first Felt back in 2002?

Slug: It was great. It was glorious, because we both drank. We both kicked it, lots of jokes. It’s a new friendship so we didn’t know each other well enough to annoy each other yet. We weren’t getting on each other’s nerves yet. It wasn’t until tour that we learned how to push each other’s buttons.

AllHipHop: What happened on tour?

Murs: Everything.

Slug: We’re both frontmen, both the center of the universe. When you have two centers of a universe inside of one universe, the gravity gets all f##ked up.

Murs: Lauryn Hill said two emcees can’t occupy the same space at the same time, it’s against the laws of physics. On the second Fugees album.

AllHipHop: Why’d it take over a decade to create another project?

Murs: We were busy.

Slug: Sample clearance.

Murs: I like that, sperm sample clearance really.

Slug: We were making familiest. We had to keep our own trains on the tracks. We had lots of people waiting on us. In order to even make this one, we had to get our families together to hang out with each other. A joint family vacation.

AllHipHop: Where did you guys do the vacation?

Slug: Right here. Minneapolis, that’s where I always take my vacations.

AllHipHop: Murs, can you explain your background for us?

Murs: It’s a show called “Go!” on Netflix, a Mexican telenovela for teenagers. My son got into it during quarantine because the boys and girls kissed. I came in, he’s sneak watching it. I said “I don’t give a s##t, watch it.” The theme song is in Spanish, it’s a hit in this house.

AllHipHop: Was Felt 4 U made during quarantine?

Murs: It was made a year before.

Slug: Before quarantine, we made it in June of 2019. We had a tour scheduled to start in August of 2020, it got canceled. This record went into the system before quarantine even happened, January of 2020. They asked us if we wanted to hold the record, we decided “nah, let’s keep the release date and put it out.” We haven’t dropped in so long, people can listen to this while you make out with your partner.

AllHipHop: You guys have both toured the world. When you found out you weren’t touring, were you happy or sad?

Slug: I was sad because it’d been so long. We haven’t toured together since 2007, we went on the Paid Dues tour together.

AllHipHop: I told Murs last time to bring back Paid Dues.

Slug: Murs, you should totally bring back Paid Dues.

Murs: You should bring back Soundset.

AllHipHop: What positives have come out of quarantine?

Slug: I need self-help. I need more than just self-help. I learned I’m not as patient as I thought I was, not as good of a parent. I got a lot to work on, it’s been a good thing though. I’ve been on some go, go, go for so long that forcing me to slow down and figure out more about myself has been a blessing in disguise.

Murs: I learned I can water my plants and grow vegetables. I got Click & Grow so I started in the house under this UV light, then I take it outside and my wife puts it in the ground. I water them everyday and watch s##t grow. It’s crazy, it’s like an entrepreneur getting laid off. I’ve worked for myself, I’ve worked traveling for 20 plus years. Can you imagine without warning…? Wasn’t even two week notice. f##k it, you’re done. I don’t get furloughed, I can’t collect unemployment. It’s been a trip man.

AllHipHop: What do you guys think of OnlyFans?

Murs: I’ve been doing the artist version of that to make money, which is Patreon. I’m watching this thing on YouTube saying OnlyFans might give a better split. I can still upload music to OnlyFans, it doesn’t have to be p### but their split’s better than Patreon.

Slug: Somebody from OnlyFans contacted me, trying to convince me to start up over there. I think they’re trying to tap into the artist market. I need to learn how to do all that s##t, I don’t even have a Patreon. I’m really not very tech, I don’t even know how to use Zoom correctly. I’ma be that guy. I’ll end up starving, they’ll be like “you didn’t have to starve, you could’ve totally did a Patreon.”

Murs: I’m on Twitch. I got him on my Twitch, we did some interviews. That was fun. Whenever Sean’s ready to come on…

AllHipHop: What do you post to Patroeon?

Murs: I do a new song and a freestyle every month. I do some podcasts, lots of other goodies depending on how much you subscribe. I have my S-tier people, so we’re playing fantasy football. They’re elite fans, they pay more a month. I send them all vinyl when s##t drops. They got to know about Felt 4 10 minutes before anybody else. I’m on there more than I’m on Instagram because Instagram’s taking your content and making s##t tons of money. I’d rather give it to people who give a f##k. Even if they give me $1 a month, I’d rather give it to them first.

AllHipHop: Off the rip, “Never Enough” has you reflecting on what’s important in life. Was there a time in your guys’ career that you felt not as fulfilled?

Slug: Fulfillment is like happiness and these other non-tangible types of adjectives. I don’t really know what it is. I know what the absence of it is, but I don’t know what the opposite of the absence of it truly is. It’s constant. You’re on a quest but if you were to get to the destination, what would you do? If one day: “ahh, I’m happy!” What does that even f##king mean? I believe you get glimpses of it, in short spurts. I can’t even wrap my head around what fulfillment as an artist is. I know there’s times I feel fulfilled, but all that means is I have to move the goal post further and keep going. I’m not unhappy, per se. You balance man, do your best to feel better more often than feeling worse.

Murs: Try to find a balance, an artist made a really good song about that. I had to rap it six times in 24 hours once. I set the Guinness Book of World Records, “Trying To Find A Balance” was one of them. I can’t even hear the word balance without going into 16 bars.

AllHipHop: You say “Sacrifice is key,” what sacrifices did both of you have to make?

Murs: Everlast posted something online, every religion has a sacrifice. To get deep, Christianity is the only religion that I know of where God made a huge sacrifice. Losing his son, seeing his son be tortured. Even our dream is a jealous entity. If you’re not going to give up something for it, you’re not going to achieve it. My first sacrifice to the game was the acceptance of my mother. She said “if you leave here to be a rapper, you’re never coming back home.” I still don’t love any woman in the world more than I love my mother. I said “f##k it, hip-hop or die. I’m out, peace. f##k this s##t.” To have her disdained, that lasted years.

Sacrificing the approval of your loved ones is one of the many sacrifices you can make it in this game. Someone told my manager, “oh yeah, Dogg sleeps two hour intervals four times a day. I’m thinking he’s smoking weed, hanging out all the time. The artist you think have the wackest lyrics, make sacrifices. Tekashi’s making sacrifices too. Anyone getting it in any field of work is making sacrifices. You have to make sacrifices you can live with. “Sacrifice is key, but never make it harder than it has to be.” I’m a victim of that, making my life harder than it has to be. You got to find that balance.

Slug: It’s hard to follow that answer, it’s good like a sermon. I agree with all of it. To me, it’s a nonstop thing. You’re constantly making sacrifices, you pick and choose what. Mostly I sacrifice my time, my health, my body, my relationships. When you do find things that make you happy, ultimately those are the things you have to sacrifice in order to obtain more happiness. It’s a nonstop sacrifice, it goes every direction. Currently, I’m sacrificing my music in order to take care of other responsibilities. It’s not even about music, it’s about life in general. Nobody will stop having to choose one path at a fork in the road on a regular basis, you’re sacrificing something when you make that choice. Y’all gonna make me cry, I’m a crier.

AllHipHop: What was the dynamic working with Ant of Atmosphere on this one?

Murs: He did Felt 2 so it was familiar, but everybody has leveled up. Ant’s working with different people, his sound’s more refined. Rap isn’t a sport. Sean and Ant are in better shape when we did Felt 2 or 3, they’re two people who work at their craft and I’m in a better place. Always good to check in with Ant, I sent him a text the other day saying I’m thinking of him. He hit me when the album dropped, it took me 2.5 weeks to reply because I got kids and craziness. He’s such a grounded person, one with the force for real. He could do something and say “you should do this,” it’s like yeah!

He’s very honest without being judgemental. It’s always good to have his influence. We knew what he was going to say before he said certain stuff on the record, we’re trained to be like “nah, Ant’s not gon’ go for that. We gotta do that part over, we gotta change this word.” He surprised us because he’s a dad now. He let me get away with a Star Wars reference, we didn’t think the R2D2 was going to get the sample clearance.

Slug: Yo, for real. That’s part of the game with Ant: trying to sneak Star Wars references past him because they make him mad. He gets mad at those.

AllHipHop: Why?

Slug: He thinks they’re corny. He’s not the same as us, he’s a little bit older. He’s a fan of Star Wars but he didn’t nerd out like me or maybe Murs might’ve. It makes sense to drop a Star Wars reference in my raps. To him, Rakim would never say that so why would you?

AllHipHop: Murs, what’s your favorite comic of all time?

Murs: Sheesh, that hurts. You hit me right in the nuts with that one. Everyone has to say Black Panther now, right? Specifically, the Priest run on Marvel Knights. Reginald Hudlin’s run on Marvel and Black Panther, where he married Storm and Shuri became the Black Panther. Final answer.

AllHipHop: Slug, you got one?

Slug: I can’t really say I have a favorite comic. Like anything, I fell in and out. When I was younger, I liked Spider-Man. I liked the Hulk. I liked anything Marvel. I went away and when I came back, I got into the stuff on Image and Vertigo. I was more of a graphic novel dude.

Murs: I’ma pick one for him. There’s a new comic on Skybound called Excellence, which is New Jack City meets Harry Potter. It’s amazing.

AllHipHop: What was your reaction to Chadwick Boseman’s death?

Slug: It was out of nowhere. I was a big fan of the film, I didn’t know he was sick, I wasn’t paying attention. I don’t know if the world knew he was sick. The biggest part I hope people can learn from is people are really quick to talk s##t nowadays, quick to judge without really knowing what other people are going through. My kids were all big fans of the Black Panther movie. s##t’s sad man. I saw some footage of him giving Denzel Washington a Lifetime Achievement Award, it made me cry. That s##t was intense.

Murs: I don’t want to take it even further down the hole but for a Black man right now: Kobe, Nipsey, John Singleton, Chadwick, George Floyd and the non-celebrities. What’s happening for real? I swear that I gave up beef around 16 because I read about Elvis. My 16th birthday I went into McDonald’s and got a Big Mac, the last time I ate beef because of colon cancer. I didn’t know Black males were at a higher rate of getting colon cancer, sickle cell, high blood pressure, more likely to get shot by the cops or a gang member. f##k man, it freaked me out. Someone that you know is healthy, live a healthy lifestyle, afford the proper food, and he’s still gone. It put a lot on me everyday.

I’ve been off sugar for a week now. Me and Sean know we suffer from acid reflux even from late night on tour. Zantac has commercials, the doctor gave me 100 pills of generic medication, that causes cancer now. On tour with Tech N9ne, doing no hype man, hardcore sets every night. I was screaming so much I got a hernia. They put a mesh film on my hernia, there’s a commercial about that causing cancer. I’m buggin’ out. Do I have COVID? Do I have cancer? Is there going to be a race war? It’s a wild time, sent me into a tailspin for a couple days, what can I do? I can fast. I fasted for a while. Okay, I got to cut out sugar. The only time I drink is when I’m away from my wife and kids really. I got to tighten up even more and be even more aware of what’s out there to get us.

AllHipHop: Anything else you want to let us know?

Slug: Felt 4 U is out now! Stream it. Buy it. Steal it.

Murs: Go order the vinyl, it’s cute and has great colors. The hoodie is white, it’s dope.

Laney Keyz Talks Working With Traxamillion & New Single With Lil Yachty

Oakland is home to a slew of talented artists, from Too Short to Mistah FAB to MC Hammer.

Now there’s a new face on the scene, who goes by the name of Laney Keyz.

The 23-year-old is here to tell his story and his truth, coming from the streets and finding his outlet in music. Being adopted at 11 months old and falling victim to his environment, he spent his adolescence and teenage years in and out of juvenile halls.

He states, “Being from Oakland taught you how to be a certain kind of way. It f##ks you up because it’ll make you feel a certain type of way towards the world, and you can’t be like that with everybody. You can’t always be defensive, that’s how I am right now.”

Inspired by his favorite rapper Meek Mill, Laney has a newfound love, appreciation, and dedication for music. Investing in himself and using all his money to move to Los Angeles to pursue his dreams full-time, he built his own home studio and has been locked in the lab perfecting his craft. Now, he releases his highly-anticipated single titled “Colorful s##t” featuring Lil Yachty.

AllHipHop: What does Oakland mean to you? There’s so much history and culture there.

Laney Keyz: Oakland means a lot actually. If I was raised anywhere else, I wouldn’t be the same person I am now. I know there’s a lot of negativity. People look at Oakland and think bad things about it, but that’s people who’ve never been there and don’t know. I’m glad, I’m happy I’m from there. I wouldn’t take anything back, I’m comfortable when I’m there.

AllHipHop: Talk about being adopted, with 5 siblings.

Laney Keyz: I was adopted when I was 11 months old, all my adopted siblings are black. They’re all obviously black. Me, it’s not so obvious. Being in the area where I’m from, people automatically assume something about me. I had to fight a lot. I started getting in trouble hella early because I used to get picked on a lot and I got tired of it really early. I started getting in trouble because I didn’t want to deal with it. I started going to jail, getting in trouble. Now I’m trying to stay focused on what I want to do as opposed to the stuff that’s around me, the negative influences. I haven’t really been back home since I left.

AllHipHop: When did you first get locked up?

Laney Keyz: When I was 15, for almost 3 years. I was about to be 16 when I went to jail, I got out when I was 18 because I couldn’t get out until I graduated. I started going to jail when I was 11 or 12. The first time I went to jail was because my grandma called the police on me, I got into it with her boyfriend. It was only for a few hours but that’s my first time being in a police car, my first time going to jail. A couple times after that for small stuff. Juvenile hall, they only send you to jail for a few weeks unless it’s something serious. I caught my serious case, and they sent me.

AllHipHop: What was your serious case?

Laney Keyz: It was a home invasion.

AllHipHop: What did you learn from being behind bars?

Laney Keyz: Honestly I learned if you’re going to do some s##t, do it by yourself. Every time I did some s##t by myself, I was good. When I did some s##t with somebody else, I got caught. It’s not worth to be honest. When I got locked up after I was 18 and I was in real jail, it didn’t matter how much money I had, I would;ve literally gave it all up to not be in jail. There’s nothing more valuable than time. When you’re wasting or losing it, you don’t get it back.

AllHipHop: When did music come into play?

Laney Keyz: While I was in camp, at Camp Sweeney. They’re juvenile camps. It wasn’t really rap at first, it was creative writing. I was just writing s##t, then it turned into rap because it’s fun. When I got out, I started rapping. When I was 18, I was freestyling at 1 in the morning outside. We’re all chilling on the street where we live, I was freestyling with my friends that I’d known since I was 10. They said “bro, you gotta go to the studio.” I’m like “ehh, I don’t know.” But he forced me, he paid for my first studio session.

AllHipHop: Your friend just believed in you?

Laney Keyz: Yeah, more than I believe in myself. He’d be at the studio at 5 in the morning. He’d be in the parking lot asleep while I was in the studio trying to record one song, because I was so uncomfortable with the process. Eventually, I got used to it. I like it, it’s fun.

AllHipHop: What’d you learn from working with Traxamillion? You guys did a tape early on.

Laney Keyz: Honestly, I learned a lot from him. He’s the first producer I actually worked in-studio with. Usually producers will send me beats, I’ll record them and send them back. Having a producer in the studio with you while you’re working, you get the input. You get to see what they actually want for the beat and try to go with that. My style of music was a lot different from what Traxamillion was used to. When I recorded the first song with him, he looked at me like “nuh uh.”

AllHipHop: What did that mean for you?

Laney Keyz: It meant a lot, the recognition was the first thing. To have a producer like that who has so many Bay Area classics. Every song that was ever an anthem in the Bay Area was made by Traxamillion. I was never really into Bay Area type music, it all sounded the same. Every 6 or 7 months, there’d be one song that topped everything. It was always a song by Traxamillion. Finding out that’s who I was working with, that was huge for me.

AllHipHop: Do you feel like real hip-hop is hard to be seen right now?

Laney Keyz: Hell yeah. Sometimes you have to make music that will get your foot in the door, you have to get the audience before you start talking to them. Like J. Cole did, he said he didn’t really like the first song he put out, and his fanbase he had didn’t really like the song. He had to do it to get the attention that he needed to put out the message he’s putting out now. The song “Good Thing” that he made when I was in 6th or 7th grade, in an interview he said “I hated this song. I didn’t like this song, but I knew it’d put me in position to make the music I wanted and give it the attention it needs.” And it did. Sometimes, I feel like that’s just what you have to do.

AllHipHop: Best memory from shooting the “Russia” visual?

Laney Keyz: The struggle part of it was the best part. Now that it’s done, you can look at that video and say “oh wow, I went through that.” We started shooting the video at 9am, that’s the scene with the car in it and we’re all drunk. We’re drinking Hennesey, we’re tired by 2pm. We’re shooting all day, we had to drive to the desert. That was a 3-hour drive, then back from the desert. We had to climb 20 flights of stairs to get to the last scene at night, I was exhausted. My best takeaway from that: the end result is always worth the work. Looking at that visual now, you couldn’t even tell I was really exhausted.

AllHipHop: Are you Russian?

Laney Keyz: No I’m not Russian, it’s just the lyrics in the song. A few people have asked me that before I even dropped the song, because I have really sharp facial features. I’m Italian.

AllHipHop: How’d you get in touch with Yachty for your new single “Colorful s##t”?

Laney Keyz: A person from my label, his name’s Adam. He manages him, he put that together. He told me he had a dope feature for me and sent me the song.

AllHipHop: Damn, Yachty’s huge!

Laney Keyz: I know, I was super surprised. I’m happy because it actually seems like he spent time on the verse, he put effort into it. A lot of people, when you give them an unknown rapper or artist, they’ll put anything. The fact that he actually tried makes me feel like he liked the song.

Redman Offers Fans A Shot At A Beat On His Next Album

(AllHipHop News) Redman has partnered with Tracklib to give producers the unique opportunity for a beat on his new, highly anticipated album Muddy Waters 2.

The Newark, NJ, a lyricist with few peers bar for bar, dropped his seminal classic Muddy Waters in the year 1996. The album, regarded as his most critically acclaimed, solidified Red as a bonafide Hip-Hop star. It is only right that he allows his fans to help craft the sequel.

Tracklib and The Funk Doc have collaborated like Styles P and Inspectah Deck before him, giving a lucky beat maestro a shot at a producer credit on Muddy Waters 2.

“Its the first company that gives you the comfort to get a sample for cheap and the platform directly to check that sample out,” Redman explained to AllHipHop.

“Put it this way, I’m going to give you examples of how Tracklib helps me. I used Tracklib on my up and coming album, Muddy Waters 2. It’s the first song on the album and I used a Tracklib sample. I’m not just talking about it. I am about it.”

“This is the first company that will relieve you of the stress,” Redman said of how the platform eases the pain of navigating through the creative and legal hoops. 

Check out Redman explaining how the Swedish-based company can help (via @allhiphopcom).

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At press time Muddy Waters 2 did not have a release date, but Red insists it is on the way. 

The prizes are listed below:

Winning producer:

  • Will be connected to Redman’s camp
  • $1000 cash prize
  • Serato Studio License (value $199)
  • Serato Sample License (value $99)
  • One-year Standard subscription to Tracklib (value $139.90)

5 runner-ups:

  • Serato Studio License (value $199)
  • Serato Sample License (value $99)
  • One-year Standard subscription to Tracklib (value $139.90)

[embedyt] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P2MBEjc_2So[/embedyt]

EXCLUSIVE: Rapper B.G. Drops Bid For Compassionate Release Over Mom’s Passionate Plea

(AllHipHop News) Former Cash Money Records rap star B.G. recently asked a judge to strike his mom’s request to be released from prison early after the letter was formally accepted as a motion by the court. 

In April, B.G.’s mom sent a letter to the court asking for a compassionate release, in hopes of getting her son a reduction on his 14-year prison sentence. 

“My son is not a threat to society and he has been rehabilitated. he has been a role model for younger prisoners. During his incarceration, he has been respectful to all the prison staff, guards, counselors, and other prisoners and he is treated with respect in return,” Ms. Dorsey wrote to Judge Susie Morgan.

“He intends to do public speaking and use his platform for a better cause and positive messages,” Ms. Dorsey stated. 

B.G.’s mom cited her fear of the spread of COVID-19 inside of Federal prison in Atlanta, where he is serving out the lengthy sentence for firearms possession and witness tampering, after he was caught trying to make an associate take a gun charge for him.  

The problem is, B.G.’s mom’s letter in support of her son was styled as a motion. Since B.G. knew this was not a sufficient pleading, he retained counsel to assist him in this matter and to preserve his right to

exhaust his administrative remedies.

“The document submitted and filed on April 28, 2020, was nothing more than a mere letter written by a frantic mother who was only concerned for her son’s well-being upon hearing how COVID-19 had spread throughout the federal prison system,” B.G.’s lawyer Jerome Matthews Jr. told Judge Susie Morgan. “Cynthia Dorsey did not know her son needed to exhaust administrative remedies with the Bureau of Prisons (BOP) before filing her request to the Court. Defendant Dorsey contends he had no knowledge that anything had been submitted and filed on his behalf on April 28th, 2020. He had not spoken with his mother regarding such.”

B.G. was sentenced in July of 2012. If he serves out his full sentence, he will be released sometime in 2026, if he serves out does a full bid. 

The rap star has already become a better person since his incarceration and he’s planning to make a difference in the community when he is released, according to his mother. 

Thankfully, Judge Morgan has sided with B.G., who is planning to make a formal request to be released from prison in the near future. 

Check out the letter B.G.’s mom wrote to the judge in hopes of reuniting with her son a little early.

Letter to Judge from B.G.'s Mom
Letter to Judge from B.G.’s Mom

NWF K Money – “Blow Up” Video

In the past 5 years, Broward County has become the home of some of the hottest rappers such as Kodak Black, the late XXXTENTACION, Ski Mask The Slump God, YNW Melly, Lajan Slim, and many more.

Along with producing chart-topping artists, Broward is also a hub for new and exciting emerging artists.

One newcomer whose flying that Broward County flag that should be on your radar is NWF K Money.

After spending the past two years dropping singles the 20-year-old rapper backed by Hidden Ruby Troy and the Ruby District who were partly responsible for launching the late XXXTENACION, Ski Mask The Slump God, and more, just released his debut project ‘Cycle Of Life’.

With the EP making its rounds, NWF K Money drops the visual for “Blow Up” which follows up the recently released “In My Feelings, Pt. 2.”

The video which is directed by Papa Chopski finds NWF K Money taking his talents to New York City, with the video being shot before COVID-19 hit, it gives us all a glimpse of how things used to be before all of the madness. In the clip, K Money explores Time Square, hits up a bodega, and takes the subway as he lets the world know his time is coming. Check out the video below.

[embedyt] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZiDy4DqkWsc[/embedyt]

Vlad Loses His Three Black Friends – Mysonne, Lord Jamar and Godfrey

(AllHipHop Rumors) I don’t really believe in giving attention to non-factors. The last time I mentioned DJ Vlad was in 2018, when it was becoming apparent that he was an agent of something! An agent of the cops! An agent of chaos and confusion! An agent of CHANGE? I simply posed the question. I don’t know that man, but Mysonne, Lord Jamar and Godfrey do. They know him very well and have come to call him a FRIEND. All have helped to legitimize, validate, and bolster the status of Vlad TV. They are not in any way owners of that platform which has garnered a sh*t ton of money for the non-practicing Jewish Russian. He’s getting PAID!

I was definitely shocked when the 1-2 punch known as Lord Jamar and Godfrey got on YouTube and aid they could no longer rock with Vlad. For those that did not know, Vlad misquoted Minister Farrakhan in an interview with D. L. Hughley, the conscious comedian. D. L. Hughley said some things but has been granted a pass because they were stated on false pretenses. It is good to see Black people rocking in solidarity. Check out what they said below:

[embedyt] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yw0pjQAD0pA[/embedyt]

I was more taken aback when Mysonne threw in the towel with Vlad. This comes after 12 years of friendships, countless defenses of “culture vulture” charges, and then some. But, he said V-Dot said that he did not care to apologize to the Minister, but would if he could get an INTERVIEW. Conditional apology. Also, he said that he didn’t care about the protests against him, as a guest within the culture of Hip-Hop, because it had not impacted his money. Welp. The relationship could not survive such a clash in morals. It is a lengthy video, but check out what Mys said about his former friend.

[embedyt] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hj9IcBMIeng[/embedyt]

What do you think? Will you start to support Black-owned platforms like AllHipHop.com now? We been here for years!

NTWRK & Rome Pays Off Team Up To Drop Estate-Approved Jean-Michel Basquiat Apparel Collection

(AllHipHop News) Three of Jean-Michel Basquiat’s most notable works (In Italian, Hollywood Africans, St. Joe Louis Surrounded By Snakes) have inspired a new capsule Video shopping app NTWRK and the Rome Pays Off brand partnered with the Basquiat Estate for the limited-run collection.

“We’re honored to be working with the Basquiat Estate on this capsule for NTWRK, it’s an opportunity to bring the artist’s work and worldview to life in new ways for an entirely new generation of artists, dreamers, and creators,” says Rome Pays Off CEO Christina Burns.

Holland Smith, NTWRK’s Director of Merchandising, adds, “We’re thrilled to be teaming up with Rome Pays Off and the Basquiat Estate for this drop. The aesthetic and narrative of Jean-Michel Basquiat’s work is a perfect fit for our members, several thousand of which have already pre-registered for a chance to shop the Basquiat capsule.”

“Basquiat: Presented by Rome Pays Off” drops today (September 22) at 9 pm ET. Consumers will be able to purchase exclusive t-shirts, hoodies, face masks, jigsaw puzzles, tote bags, and an all-natural rubber yoga mats.

Vice producer and writer Abdullah Saeed will host a live broadcast on NTWRK to introduce the collection. Basquiat’s niece and fashion model, Jessica Kelly, will also be part of the campaign.

“Jean-Michel would have been perfectly at home in today’s remix culture,” states to Lisane Basquiat, the artist’s sister. She goes on to say, “The restless, indomitable spirit of today’s youth, reflects the energy of my brother’s work. The story of his meteoric rise through what was once a mostly white art world is the kind of inspiration we need out there today.”

Basquiat started his journey in the art world as a New York City-based graffiti artist in the 1970s. His street art-inspired work eventually made it into galleries. Before his death in 1988 at the age of 27, Basquiat began showing his neo-expressionist pieces around the world.

In 2017, Basquiat’s “Untitled” (1982) sold for $110.5 million to Japanese businessman Yusaku Maezawa at a Sotheby’s auction. The iconic painter has been referenced in countless Hip Hop songs such as Jay-Z’s “Picasso Baby,” Nas’s “Land of Promise,” J. Cole’s “Rich N*ggaz,” Lil Wayne’s “John,” Rick Ross’s “Three Kings,” Nipsey Hussle’s “Face The World,” and A$AP Rocky’s “Phoenix.”

Travis Scott Announces New Single “Franchise”

(AllHipHop News) Travis Scott is ready to drop another new record. The Houston-raised rapper announced “Franchise” will hit the internet on Friday. Fans have the chance to buy a deluxe CD or deluxe cassette on Scott’s website.

Visual artist George Condo designed the “Franchise” cover art. Condo previously created the imagery for Kanye West’s masterful 2010 album My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy.Kan

“I’m been up stairs cheifing them tunes! Condo Been downstairs painting with da wine on tilt,” tweeted Scott on Monday night.

So far in 2020, Scott hit #1 on Billboard‘s Hot 100 chart with the Kid Cudi-assisted “The Scotts.” The Cactus Jack label leader also released “The Plan” off Tenet: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack.

TDE’s Reason Drops Sequel to Debut, “The Soul Pt. 2.”

It’s been just a few years since Anthony “Top Dawg” Tiffith announced the newest superstar signee to Top Dawg Entertainment, with TDE’s Reason. Debuting back in 2018 with his brand new single tiled “The Soul,” Reason, gripped the hearts and minds of TDE fans and then shortly thereafter appeared on the track “Seasons” on the Black Panther Soundtrack executive produced by Kendrick. From then on it was clear he was distinctly setting himself apart from your average emcees.

Fast forward to September 2020 and Reason is positioned in a class of Hip-Hop’s elite lyricists via the TDE signing and handcrafted stream of music. Now emerging with a follow up to the single that started it all, Reason gives Hop-Hop fans “The Soul Pt. 2.”  The reflective track takes a look back at the last two years since the Carson, Calif.-native, signed to TDE., On the track Reason has convo’s with Kendrick Lamar, a former idol turned peer and himself as he tackles his own ego.

SZA’s New TDE Release Featuring Ty Dolla Sign Is Going To “Hit Different”

“I’m having issues cause Moose and Keem keep preachin’ ‘you can’t move around solo no more, you gettin’ bigger’/Yeah, I been gettin’ bigger, so much bigger that my ego see my body and it’s struggling to fit up in it”

Says TDE’s Reason, “The Soul Pt. 2.“is an honest record about the head space I’m in right now, as well as serves as a time capsule for the various head spaces I’ve found myself in over the last couple years.” 

Check it out as Anthony “Top Dawg” Tiffith took to Twitter to announce the newest signee to Top Dawg Entertainment, with “The Soul.” Ever since then we at AllHipHop have been hooked on Reason’s music. Check out his new single above:

47 GiNO: 17 Years Old & On His Way To Greatness

47 GiNO is only 17 years old and already proving his worth in the music industry. One look at him, and you’ll immediately notice his signature curly hair.

One listen of his music, you’ll immediately catch a vibe. Plus, he raps about real-life struggles and experiences, reminding the masses that we all got through it in this thing called life.

He states, “It’s pressure. If you hear my music, you can tell off the rip.”

Now he’s under the wings of Jason Geter, the music executive and mogul is known in the industry for discovering and signing only the best talent from T.I. to Travis Scott to Iggy Azalea.

On “NO MERCY,” GiNO raps about “I ain’t tryna speak if it ain’t bout the cash, me and CASHAE bout to run up that bag,” shouting out the production team he works the most frequently with. Always feeding his fanbase, he drops his most recent singles and visuals for “No More” and “No Mercy.”

AllHipHop caught up with 47 GiNO in the middle of recording. Being a teenager with that type of work ethic is definitely admirable, and the real ones can appreciate.

AllHipHop: What was it like growing up in Miami?

47 GiNO: It’s different. In Miami, especially in Florida, everybody got their own different style. You go to ATL, it’ll be different from people in Florida. In Florida, you got your own slang. The way you move, you got your own thing.

AllHipHop: When did music come into play?

47 GiNO: I started when I was 15, always around studios because of my big bros. They’d always have me in the studio, one day I said “I want to do music.” I’ve always wanted to do music. Always be writing songs, but I never thought about taking it serious until I started freestyling. I usually freestyle, messing around on beats. My people would always tell me “yo you hard, do music. Start dropping songs.” I went to the studio, recorded some songs. I released them and everybody started f##king with me. I kept it going, kept dropping.

AllHipHop: I know you dropped out of high school and was primarily raised by your grandmother.

47 GiNO: The first year of high school, in my head I already knew what I wanted to be. I didn’t want to be working a 9 to 5, I wanted to do something different. I had a different purpose from everybody else. In school, I stopped doing good. I didn’t care. I’d finish a test and go home, just doing it to get it out the way. I’d leave school and go right to the studio. My whole time in high school was two months, everyday I was in the studio after that. Everyday.

In school I got into this fight and they suspended me. I went to the suspension school in Homestead when I got kicked out, wasn’t feeling it there. It’s pointless, why am I gonna have this on my record? I stopped going and did this music full-time. I was always with my grandma because she supported me the whole way. She wasn’t telling me “you gotta stay in school, you gotta do this.” She didn’t force me to do anything, she let me do what I wanted in my life. I ended up telling her I wanted to do music, I love it. From then I kept doing songs and songs.

AllHipHop: Who were you bumping growing up?

47 GiNO: Coming up, I was always listening to different genres. Recently when I’m with my boys, we listen to some rock stuff and some trap. We mix it up. When I was coming up, Lil Wayne. The OGs in the game. Ross… Florida! I was always listening to people crazy with the flows, what they said. That always got my attention.

AllHipHop: You’re so young, at what point did you realize you wanted to be in the music business?

47 GiNO: When I started to see my growth. I’ll drop a song and see how much I improved from the last song I dropped. That motivated me because I’m getting better. Especially the people that supported me, that struck with me. Damn, even if I got a couple 100 people who f##ks with me, I’m still doing something. That always kept me going. I’m getting better, I’ma keep working and see what happens.

AllHipHop: What’s the spiritual significance in your name?

47 GiNO: Gino has something to do with half of my last name. 47 is an angel number, I see that number a lot. I searched it up, it means “stay on the right path.” After that, it was 47. At first, my name didn’t have 47. Gino by itself. Over time, I put 47 because I kept seeing it. Every time I saw it, it was something good. Yeah, that gotta be a part of my name.





AllHipHop: You just released “No More,” who or what inspired this track?

47 GiNO: There’s certain times I’d go into the studio feeling like “I want to make something hard with a crazy beat, or something slow. When I made “No More,” it was different. The whole vibe, the whole mood and energy made me feel like “I don’t want to care no more!” [starts singing song] The whole time, I’m doing the melody in my head while hearing the beat. I freestyle most of my music. I don’t even write, I just think about it. As I’m thinking, I’m punching in and recording. That whole time, I kept punching in with that melody, that flow, that vibe. Kept it going. That goes for people who be going through stuff, I know how it is. It be hard.

AllHipHop: How did you land with production team Cashae and Heavy Sound Labs?

47 GiNO: It was over Instagram. One of the persons I used to work with in the studio, Cashae was working with that artist and that artist knew me. The artist that knew me went to Cashae and said “yo, I have this super young artist and he’s hard.” Cashae found me when I was 16, I just turned 17. Cashae followed me, I followed them.

We started interacting through DMs, texting “yo, we gotta link!” Never linked. We always set it up: “Friday, we’re gonna do something!” Friday comes and we’ll both be doing our own thing working. One day we said “let’s do something for real.” I end up sliding to the studio with my boys. Off rip, I already love their vibe. It wasn’t the feeling when you meet someone and they act like they’re better. “Oh, I’m helping you!” It’s more “let’s help each other,” out of love. Wasn’t even no signed deals, off love. The first time I went over there, they’re playing beats. Every beat, I was freestyling the hook. “Yo, lemme lay that down.” We made 4 songs. Me and Cashae got 200 something songs in the vault sitting there. They’re ready to go, we pushing them out little by little!

AllHipHop: What were those convos with Jason Geter like?

47 GiNO: Oh my, that was intense. My manager Jordan said “yo, I’m friends with Jason.” At first, I thought “who’s that?” She started telling me about him, I never knew he’s the one with the Grand Hustle and Trap. I’m always worried about “okay I gotta do this, I gotta do that.” I don’t even be looking around, trying to look out for myself. Looking at that, that’s crazy! He for real wants to work with me?” At first, I didn’t believe it. We got on a phone call, the love he shows is crazy.

He said “I can take you to the next level, we can do big things.” I really felt it. He saw my vision, what I wanted to do and how far I wanted to take it. I didn’t want to be the artist who pops, and your career’s over. I want to be an established artist, pushing out hit records. Me and Jason kept talking back and forth, we’re like “yeah, let’s do it!” I ended up signing with Heavy Sound Labs, it’s been a crazy experience. Even my grandma and my people, they’re proud of me. My grandma’s like “I ain’t never do none of that. When I was your age, I was in school trying to focus. Look at you, living life!” It’s a blessing.

AllHipHop: What makes you stand out from these other rappers?

47 GiNO: It’s different. When you hear my music: the tone, the way the beat is with my voice. When you listen to me, you can’t hear somebody else. You can’t say it sounds like him a little or this beat sounds like that.” The way I do my music, I was trying to stay away from sounding like somebody else. I want to do it so when you hear it, it’s something new to your ears. Damn, ever heard this type of music before. I try to set a bar.

AllHipHop: 3 things you need in the studio?

47 GiNO: Definitely snacks, 100%. You know about Cantina? It’s only in Florida. We get Cantina, be chillin’ on that. Hot Cheetos. I need water. Grandma cookies, vanilla! Chips honestly. I don’t care which, just some chips and I’ll be good.

AllHipHop: Do you write or freestyle?

47 GiNO: I do a little bit of both. If I’m freestyling already when the beat comes off, I’ma freestyle on the beat. If I’m listening and come up with something, I’ll write. Sometimes I’ll write a hook, then freestyle a verse. In depends, I do it different. One day I’ll write a verse, one day I’ll freestyle a hook.

AllHipHop: How has quarantine affected you?

47 GiNO: This is the best time to work, stay focused and do your thing. That’s all I’ve been doing. Look, I’m recording right now. [shows microphone]

AllHipHop: Best encounter you had with a fan?

47 GiNO: I was shooting my music video in this water park on a beach. I was walking and I kept noticing these 3 boys were following us the whole time. My boy says “don’t even stress.” They’d follow us everywhere! We go down, they go down. We go here, they go here. I said “I’ma see what’s up.” I ended up going over there like “what’s good?” They said “I was scared to come up to you, but I really f##k with you.” [laughs] You should’ve came to me, it’s no pressure. He said “you’re shooting your video, I don’t want to interrupt.” I appreciate it. He said “can I get a picture with you?” I ended up getting a picture with all 3 of them, that was crazy. Love to them.

AllHipHop: What can we expect next?

47 GiNO: So much to take in. Music videos, a lot more songs. A whole bunch of more creativity.

Stayed tuned, a lot of pressure. We’re only going up from here.

‘Euphoria’ Star Zendaya Makes History At 2020 Emmy Awards

(AllHipHop News) The 72nd Primetime Emmy Awards were presented last night. Due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, the ceremony was held remotely, with the night’s winners accepting their trophies virtually.

Zendaya was one of the big victors at the Emmys. The star of HBO’s teen-drama Euphoria won Outstanding Lead Actress in a Drama Series for her portrayal of recovering teenage drug addict Rue Bennett.

At 24 years old, Zendaya is now the youngest woman to ever win a dramatic Lead Actress award from the Academy of Television Arts & Sciences. She is also just the second Black woman to be honored in that category after Viola Davis in 2015 (How To Get Away With Murder).

“I know this feels like a really weird time to be celebrating, but I just want to say that there is hope in the young people out there.” said Zendaya during her acceptance speech.

She continued, “I know that our TV show doesn’t always feel like a great example of that, but there is hope in the young people. And I just want to say to all my peers out there doing the work in the streets, I see you, I admire you, I thank you.”

EXCLUSIVE: Griselda’s Armani Caesar Says She Dropped “The Liz” To Shutdown Doubters

Additional reporting by $lop E. Phizzle (@slopsshotya)

(AllHipHop News) Lauryn Hill. Jean Grae. Remy Ma. Rapsody. Lil Kim. Foxy Brown. Ms. Hustle.

These women are more than just femcees, a term developed to identify female emcees, they are rappers.

The best kinds of rappers, too. The ones that make anyone on a track with them write better (male or female), spitting with the vibrato of a dude but never allowing you to mistake the fact that they are grown women.

Armani Caesar, the first lady of Griselda, is one of them kind of jawns.

We loved the Buffalo native on the track “Lil Cease.”

Her gritty feature made a mark a few months and blessed Westside Gunn with a banger that embodied the wreck that Lil Kim brought in the early Junior Mafia days. What a great way to wet the palate of hungry Hip-Hop enthusiasts, just starving to hear real lyricism over hot tracks. But no one wants a little taste — where is the meal?

On Friday, Armani Caesar dropped her debut project with Griselda called The Liz Tape featuring Westside Gun, Conway the Machine, and Benny the Butcher.

“Everything is kind of just really for the Griselda fans, to kind of feed them, because when I got signed, a lot of people didn’t get it, because of how I looked or how, like, my music sounded previously,” Armani Caesar told AllHipHop.com. “And they didn’t really have faith in the fact that I would be able to rap.”

The squad has put the paprika in the sauce, pulling out the big guns to produce this fresh talent. DJ Premier, 808 Mafia, and Camoflauge Monk take the production lead yielding those “grimy boom-bap” vibrations that have made this collective near and dear to real heads’ hearts.

When asked about the project, Caesar explains the passion behind the project and her goal to shut down the naysayers. Still a young woman, you wonder if she has done the homework to rock side-by-side with these guys who are students of Wu-Tang, Nas, Mobb Deep, M.O.P.

Armani Caesar officially signed with the Griselda collective in March — but she has known Westside Gunn, Benny the Butcher, and Conway the Machine for almost 10 years.

“Wes (Westside Gunn) was very adamant about it ‘like, No, I want you to do you. So I want you to be able to because you can do both. And I know this because I’ve been knowing you for 10 years, I knew when you first started rapping how you were and you were able to do songs with Benny and Conway before anybody heard of you.’ So I think it’s just time to show the world,” Armani explained to AllHipHop.com. “So he’s like, “let’s shut everybody up be on our Griselda stuff real quick and then we can start with everything else.”

Armani dedicated her new release to DJ Shay, the founder of the Buff City label, who transitioned recently from COVID-19 complications.

At 48, he not only transformed the upstate New York city’s rap landscape but also shifted the deathly spirit of Hip-Hop by being an intricate part of bringing Benny the Butcher and Conway the Machine to the forefront of the culture.

If Griselda has brought a fresh air to Hip-Hop’s conversation, tapping Armani as the chick in their crew was a move equally as refreshing. She deserves more than a listen, she deserves to have her name next to the aforementioned greats.

Bay Area Rapper Tay Way Killed In Broad Daylight Shooting

(AllHipHop News) A popular Bay Area rapper was gunned down over the weekend in a brazen shooting.

On Friday, September 18th, rapper Tay Way, whose real name is Lamonta Butcher, was murdered in Richmond, CA, in a shooting that left two others injured.

While the popular emcee lost his life, the two other victims have already been released from the hospital.

The local law enforcement says that the gunplay started right before 12:00 pm around the intersection of Macdonald Ave and Fourth Street in Richmond’s Iron Triangle neighborhood.

Police officers were called to the scene once a Shotspotter activation of 17 gunshots. Once they arrived on the scene, Tay Way was already dead, according to Capt. Al Walle.

Tay Way had just been filming himself hanging around the way. Minutes after posting this video on his social media, he was shot.

There were witnesses to the shooting who reported that the gunmen shop the rapper from their vehicle.

Tay Way burst on the scene in Richmond 2010. In July, he released an album entitled, Rich City Host. His songs “F##k it Up” and “Run With This” were big hit for his fans.

Fans took to Twitter to give their condolences and share their disbelief.

The tweets were both heartfelt and endearing.

“If I was your school colleague, I might not know what you are bearing up under. I am so sorry for the level of violence, wariness, and loss you and your neighbors carry. #RIPTayWay – May his memory be a blessing despite the violence of his loss.”

https://twitter.com/lulbbyjess/status/1307345878965919745

https://twitter.com/RichmondLyfe/status/1307061736273596417

Vampires After Rappers In New HBO Series “Thirst”

(AllHipHop News) A new Hip-Hop horror series is set to terrify fans when it premieres on HBO.

Leah Benavides Rodriguez and Carlito Rodriguez’s Hip-Hop vampire drama has been picked up by HBO.

Titled, “Thirst,” the series will follow an Atlanta rapper’s journey to success. The key to his ascension is his proximity to a popping rap group in the area.

He is hyped when they invite him into the fold — but he has no clue that they are a family of vampires I’ve been sucking the life out of their victims for centuries.

Derived from Kevin Jordan’s original idea, “Thirst” is poised to push the barriers of what is acceptable content for those in the Hip-Hop space.

“Music has been integral to both our lives, and ‘Thirst’ is the perfect opportunity to blend genres, while exploring the intersection of fame, culture and what it means to be American,” Benavides Rodriguez and Carlito Rodriguez told Variety about their project. “We’re excited to bring it to life with Macro Television Studios and the rest of our dope team, and thrilled it has found its home at HBO.”

Benavides Rodriguez and Rodriguez will not only be writers, but will serve as executive producers and showrunners.

HBO has yet to reveal the air dates for “Thirst.”

Rapper Targeted In Double Shooting At Houston Strip Club

(AllHipHop News) Police in Houston are trying to get to the bottom of a violent shootout in front of a popular strip club in earlier this morning (September 20th).

V LIVE was hosting a “Twerk Wars” party when the violence erupted.

According to Houston Police Detective Andrew McCabe of the Major Assault Unit, a rapper pulled up to the spot around 3:30 a.m. when he was targeted by a gunman.

“From what we can gather there was a rapper here tonight. And as he arrived here. He began taking gunfire from unknown suspects,” McCabe told ABC13. “Gunfire was exchanged between the suspects and him. And then, both him and the suspects fled. They were two people that were struck by gunfire.”

Two of the wounded men were employees of the strip club. One man was shot in the head, and the other person was struck in the side.

Police have not revealed the identity of the rapper who was targeted, nor have they announced any arrests as of press time.

Fortunately, both victims are expected to survive.